Republican presidential candidate former President Donald Trump gives a thumbs-up after speaking at a campaign event in Rochester, New Hampshire on January 21. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
Former US President Donald Trump had rock solid support from New Hampshire Republicans in his primary victory today, with even most backers of rival Nikki Haley acknowledging the GOP belongs to him.
Yet as Trump’s hold on securing the party’s nomination tightened, AP VoteCast found that some voters express concerns that he is too extreme to compete in the November general election. Some also worry about his legal peril in a trio of pending criminal trials.
Haley, a former South Carolina governor and a UN ambassador under Trump, performed relatively better with college graduates and moderates, a possible sign that Trump has yet to expand his political base.
The survey found signs that primary voters on the Democratic side are rallying around President Joe Biden on the economy, but many have concerns about his age – he is 81 — and his handling of the situation in the Middle East.
Only weeks into 2024, voters already show an awareness of Trump’s strengths and liabilities. But even as the coronavirus has faded as the challenge during the 2020 election, the cultural and social forces that Biden-Trump match-up have hardened in ways that are testing the country’s sense of itself.
The New Hampshire primaries are unique because undeclared voters - those not affiliated with either party - can choose to vote in either party’s primary. This draws in voters who are not necessarily party loyalists.
More than four in 10 GOP primary voters were not affiliated with a party, compared with about two in 10 in the Democratic primary. Among those affiliated with the Republican Party in the state, Trump won handily.
AP VoteCast is a survey of 1968 New Hampshire voters who are taking part in the Republican primary and 903 Democratic primary voters. The survey is conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research.
He won in the small towns and rural communities, where about two-thirds of primary participants say they live. Most GOP voters in the state lack a college degree; about two-thirds of them voted for Trump. He won about 7 in 10 Republican voters who identified as conservatives.
Trump was backed by Republicans who prioritise either immigration or the economy, the two top issues among GOP voters in New Hampshire and Iowa, where the former president won the leadoff caucuses last week.
Among those in New Hampshire who named immigration as their top priority, about three-quarters support Trump. New Hampshire’s primary voters agreed with Trump on the need to limit immigration and build a wall on the US-Mexico border.
About half of those said the economy was the top issue backed Trump.
How Haley’s strengths fell short
Haley drew her support from groups that could be crucial in November. But those groups were distinct minorities in the GOP electorate.
She beat Trump among primary participants who were not formally affiliated with any party. About half of Haley’s supporters graduated from college and half of them identify as moderates.
In many cases, her backers were simply uncomfortable with Trump.
Haley performed well among those who said Trump did something illegal in at least one of the criminal cases against him. And in the 2020 presidential election, about half of Haley’s supporters voted for Biden, a Democrat.
Iowa exposed suburban voters as a potential weakness for Trump. While Haley did slightly better in New Hampshire’s suburban communities than she did in other areas, she still didn’t pull ahead of Trump in those areas.
Compared with Iowa caucusgoers, New Hampshire Republican primary voters have slightly more doubts about Trump.
In New Hampshire, about half of GOP voters are very or somewhat concerned that Trump is too extreme to win the general election. Only about one-third say the same about Haley.
Regarding Trump’s criminal indictments, about one-third of GOP participants in New Hampshire believe he has done something illegal related to either his alleged attempt to interfere in the vote count in the 2020 presidential election, his role in what happened at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, or the classified documents found at his Florida home after he left the White House.
Republican voters expect Trump to be GOP nominee
The vast majority of Republican voters in New Hampshire, about eight in 10, believed Trump would win the nomination, a finding that came after his dominant showing in Iowa.
Only about two in 10 say Haley will be the nominee. In a blow to a candidate who has pitched herself as a Trump alternative, more than half of Haley’s own supporters think Trump will represent the party on the ballot.
About eight in 10 say they decided before Iowa which candidate they would support. After the caucuses, three contenders ended their campaigns: biotech investor Vivek Ramaswamy, former Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.
About six in 10 GOP voters say they had their minds made up more than a month ago, including about four in 10 saying they have known all along.
Democrats approve of Biden overall
Democrats in New Hampshire broadly approve of Biden’s leadership.
About eight in 10 approve, as the president has tried to solidify a diverse coalition. More than eight in 10 approve of his economic leadership and about eight in 10 approve of how he has approached the student debt issue. But not everything Biden does received strong plaudits. Only about six in 10 approve of how he is handling immigration, and only about half approve of his handling of the conflict between the Israelis and the Palestinians.
About four in 10 say Biden is too old to serve a second term as president.
During his presidency, the Democratic Party has chosen to make South Carolina the first official presidential contest, a choice that has relegated Biden to write-in status in New Hampshire. Just over half said it is very or somewhat important to them that New Hampshire’s presidential primary is the first in the nation.